Looks like they are in some sort of gym, I can see
the hardwood floor and exit sign.
The African Americans are happy to vote, since they weren't allowed to in the past.
How often the African Americans vote, like maybe twice a year.
The booths look very private like how people vote
today, very similar to today.
Everyone wants their vote to be private, so there are covered booths.
If this is in Selma or another place in the south.
Many people are in line waiting their turn to vote.
Many African Americans wanted to vote that day.
Why the African Americans are voting, and how happy they are to vote.
There are many people at the voting place.
Both the whites and "colereds" are together, because it looks like one woman may be white.
How many people voted that day, and if it was crowded there all day.
Evan 63
1. There were seperate entrances for black and white people.(At the voting office, and many other places.)
2. The "Coloreds" door was locked at the Selma Voter Registration Office, but the "Whites" door was not locked.
3. The woman at the voting place wrote down Dorothy's license plate when Dorothy kicked the locked "Coloreds" door, and Dorothy's husband was warned by his boss that he would be fired if Dorothy misbehaved again.
4. When Dorothy went back to the office, she had to wait for two hours and fifteen minutes before she got her question form.
5. The registration lady gave Dorothy an impossible question that read "How many bubbles in a bar of soap?", that she had to pass in order to vote.
6. Dorothy went back to vote again, and the woman gave her a normal registration form, to list her name, address, profession, phone number and Social Security number. Dorothy turned her form in, but the woman charged her a poll tax of five dollars. Dorothy couldn't afford that, so she couldn't vote.
7. Since Dorothy got mad again at the woman, her husband, Hector, got a call from his boss at their home, and he got fired.
Ida 65
1) They didnt get attention when they stood up for themselves.
2) The governor said that there would be segregation forever.
3) The governor forbid their march.
4) Non of the people can swim... thats an example of how they were never educated
5) The major wouldn't let them defend themselves
6) A white helmet symbolising the white race.
7) White people cheered
Katie 68 group #3 A Tugging String chapter 6
They kept saying get the n**.
They nocked the black people out with billy clubs and gases and ran the over with horses.
They gave the black people a hard time when they went to sign up to vote they asked her "How many bubbles are in a bar of soap." and another time they locked her out.
After when they were gonning to go to the doctors and they made them go to the segrogated one
Allison G 62
In chapter six i felt lke when they where trying to march they had no freedom to do so. The state police where ready with gas mask's almost like they new they where going to gas the people in the crowd. its no fair the blacks had the face all diffrent kinds of gases in the crowed and the tropers had gas maskes.
- Looks like they are in some sort of gym, I can see
the hardwood floor and exit sign.- The booths look very private like how people vote
today, very similar to today.Evan 63
1. There were seperate entrances for black and white people.(At the voting office, and many other places.)
2. The "Coloreds" door was locked at the Selma Voter Registration Office, but the "Whites" door was not locked.
3. The woman at the voting place wrote down Dorothy's license plate when Dorothy kicked the locked "Coloreds" door, and Dorothy's husband was warned by his boss that he would be fired if Dorothy misbehaved again.
4. When Dorothy went back to the office, she had to wait for two hours and fifteen minutes before she got her question form.
5. The registration lady gave Dorothy an impossible question that read "How many bubbles in a bar of soap?", that she had to pass in order to vote.
6. Dorothy went back to vote again, and the woman gave her a normal registration form, to list her name, address, profession, phone number and Social Security number. Dorothy turned her form in, but the woman charged her a poll tax of five dollars. Dorothy couldn't afford that, so she couldn't vote.
7. Since Dorothy got mad again at the woman, her husband, Hector, got a call from his boss at their home, and he got fired.
Ida 65
1) They didnt get attention when they stood up for themselves.
2) The governor said that there would be segregation forever.
3) The governor forbid their march.
4) Non of the people can swim... thats an example of how they were never educated
5) The major wouldn't let them defend themselves
6) A white helmet symbolising the white race.
7) White people cheered
Katie 68 group #3
A Tugging String chapter 6
Allison G 62
In chapter six i felt lke when they where trying to march they had no freedom to do so. The state police where ready with gas mask's almost like they new they where going to gas the people in the crowd. its no fair the blacks had the face all diffrent kinds of gases in the crowed and the tropers had gas maskes.